hedge funds, volatility, and the career ending margin calls · hedge funds, volatility, and the...
TRANSCRIPT
Hedge Funds, Volatility, and the
Career Ending Margin Calls
GLENN MIGLIOZZI, CFABABSON COLLEGE
DISCLAIMER: THE VIEWS OF THIS PRESENTATION REFLECT THE OPINIONS OF THE PRESENTER AND NOT THE OPINION OR VIEWS OF BABSON COLLEGE
Who is our presenter and what makes him qualified to
hold us captive for an hour?
Finance Lecturer at Babson College Former hedge fund manager seeded by
Julian Robertson (Tiger) Former Head of Fixed Income at two mega
investment firms Former Director of Corporate Finance at
Aetna ( Credit Rating “AAA” >> “A”) Former Student of Dr. Robert Merton of MIT
Sloan (Founder and Partner of Long-Term Capital Management)
When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by Roger Lowenstein
Well Known Hedge Fund Managers?
Not a Hedge Fund Manager!
Wait! What?What is a
Hedge Fund?
Hedge funds are alternative investments using pooled funds that employ different strategies to earn active return, or alpha, for their investors. (Investopedia)
The original hedge funds were structured to hold stocks both long and short. Therefore, the positions were "hedged" to reduce risk, so the investors made money regardless of whether the market increased or decreased. (The Balance)
Fee Structure = Management fee (1.5%) + a annual performance fee (20%)
So you want to be a HF
manager… Generate a five year investment track
record of managing a long/short fund Raise $50 million from yourself, family,
friends, sprinkle in a billionaire or two And a few other items to acquire: Prime Broker (to borrow from) Technology – research, systems, etc. Administrator (record keeper) Office Space + Team Compliance 42k other things
How many Hedge Funds
and do we need them?
According to Hedge Fund Research, approximately 9K HFs managing about $3.2 Trillion. Over last 5 yrs. More than 4k closed
With Fed Quantitative Monetary infinity, “managed” and “debt fueled”: equity market returns averaged almost 12.5%
Constanza Effect: Do the opposite of everything you would normally do. 2019 S&P + 31.5% while HFs + 7.8%....so in 2020 long HFs and short S&P 500
Why be short stocks if the asset class outperforms over the long term?
$100M Longs 12/31/19 Zoom Communications Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Citrix Systems Digital Realty Gilead Science Long Portfolio Weighted Beta 1.25
Market Neutral Hedge Fund
$100M Shorts 12/31/19 Apache Corp. Norwegian Cruise Royal Caribbean Marathon Oil Noble Energy Short Portfolio Weighted Beta 1.25
For illustrative Purposes Only
Why be short stocks if the asset class outperforms over the long term?
$100M Longs 1Q 2020 Zoom Communications +114% Regeneron Pharmaceuticals +30% Citrix Systems +28% Digital Realty +17% Gilead Science +16% Long Portfolio Average +41%
Long/Short Portfolio = +41% - (-78%) = +119% hmmmmm
$100M Shorts 1Q 2020 Apache Corp. – 84% Norwegian Cruise – 81% Royal Caribbean – 76% Marathon Oil -76% Noble Energy – 75% Short Portfolio Average – 78%
What is the #1 advantage a
hedge fund has over a long only
IMA?
What are the advantages a
hedge fund has over a long only
IMA?
Unregulated - #1 Answer Diversification – non correlated Long/Short Derivatives (ISDA & Futures) Gate Redemptions “Side Pocket” Portfolios The Greatest Minds $$ Can Buy Eating Your Own Cooking LEVERAGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Buy $500,000 home with 20% down ($100K) as required for conforming loan
And borrow $400,000 from the bank In one year the home price goes up
20% to $600,000 (100% return) Sorry, in one year, the home price goes
down 20% (-100% return), the mortgage firm does not require you to invest more equity into home unless you are going to refinance
Talk to us About Leverage – It’s always good….right?
The Long/Short Equity example did not require significant leverage. 1X Long +1X Short = 2X Leverage
The Longs and the Shorts had the same weighted beta – Market Neutral
One requirement of the Long/Short portfolio is the need for individual stock price volatility for out-sized returns
The positions of this strategy are typically highly liquid.
Do Hedge Funds Require Leverage For Out-Sized Returns?
Global Macro Strategy – Investment Thesis The Long and the Short positions may be
based on economic forecasts The positions may be expressed in stock,
bonds, derivatives, commodities and currency Trade deficits or geopolitical events which
impact the currency/ratings of a country The strategy typically does not require
significant leverage while the long and short positions can be highly liquid
.
What other HF Strategies don’t require significant leverage?
Managed Futures describes a strategy whereby a professional manager assembles a diversified portfolio of futures contracts
The Long and the Short positions may be based on spot and forward price anomolies
The supply and demand a commodity or precious metal
Reversion to the mean of highly volatile futures (price implied vol or outlier price)
The strategy typically does not require significant leverage while the long and short positions can be highly liquid
.
What other HF Strategies don’t require significant leverage?
Short-Biased Strategies seek to outperform by recognizing financial deterioration/distress early.
The Short positions are often expressed by the purchased of put options or credit default swaps – known premium with embedded leverage (Caution: naked short equity positions - see Tesla)
The tail-risk of investment return results is found to be much fatter than the estimated projections; 100 year events occur much more frequently.
The strategy typically does not require significant leverage
What other HF Strategies don’t require significant leverage?
Convertible Bond Arbitrage Upon the announcement of an acquisition:
buy stock of seller and short stock of buyer The market stock price of the acquired may
be pennies less the announced price due to uncertainty of the deal closing… bidding war
The strategy typically does require significant leverage as the amount involved could be less than a dollar.
Reverse Trade when acquisition is completed
HF Strategy requiring significant leverage and min. volatility
Fixed Income Arbitrage The fixed income markets have less participants,
enormous specific issues, and often have minorpricing dislocations
The investment thesis is to buy the under-valued security and short the over-valued security to pick up “pennies” and leverage the trade many times
The trade gets reversed when the dislocation no longer exists when the pricing relationship returns to its mean relationship.
IF THE RELATIONSHIP CONTINUES TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE MEAN, THE HF MAY NEED TO POST MORE MARGIN ($$$) TO KEEP THE TRADE ON
HF Strategy requiring
significant leverage and min. volatility
Some Bond Geek Terms
What is a basis point? One basis point is .0001 or 0.01%. Got it, so 50 basis points would be equal to .0050 or 0.5%. Basis Points are the measure that Bond Geeks use to calculate the % change in a bond price from a change in interest rates.
It is an inverse relationship, when interest rates move down, the price of the bond increases as the cash flows of the bond are now discounted at a lower interest rate (discount rate)
Duration is an approximate measure of a bond's price sensitivity to changes in interest rates. So if a bond’s duration was 5 years and interest rates were to fall by 100 basis points or 1%...the bond’s price would increase by approximately 5%
Price Value of a Basis Point = Bond Duration x Market Value X .0001
Fixed Income Arbitrage with $100 million of capital with leverage of 50X
Long
$2.5B U.S. Treasury 25 year Bond @ 5% YTM Price Value of a Basis Point = $5 million
Short $2.5B U.S. Treasury 30 Year Bond @ 4.7% YTM Price Value of a Basis Point = $5 million
No Volatility Expected 1 yr. return: (.05 - .047) * 2.5B = 7.5 million or 7.5% return for the carry trade ( excluding borrowing costs for our example please)
Movement to the mean expected: The difference in the YTM of the two securities collapses by 5 bp. The approximate gain would be the change in yield of 5 b.p. (5% - 4.95%) times the Price Value of a Basis Point of $5 million would equal an additional $25 million or 25%. So 32.5% total gain for trade.
Fixed Income Arbitrage with $100 million of capital with leverage of 50X
Long
U.S. Treasury 25 year Bond @ 5% YTM $2.5B Price Value of a Basis Point = $5 million
Short U.S.Treasury 30 Year Bond @ 4.7% YTM $2.5B Price Value of a Basis Point = $5 million
Unexpected Volatility 1 yr. Return (How about a 1998 Russian Debt Crisis and an all out panic to the very most liquid risk free asset – THE BOND!)
25 year Bond YTM falling 0.003% & 30 year Bond falling 0.005% Long Position makes 30bp * $5miilion = $150 million Short Position losses 50bp * $5 million = $250 million
Leverage and Tigers and Bear Markets, Oh My! – Prime Broker and Leverage
Prime Broker (PB) as part of the service provides:• Financing to purchase securities that you don’t
own – the amount of margin you will need to post will be a function of the expected volatility of the underlying security. (As such, T- Bills would require minimum margin to be posted…while some illiquid small cap stock may require much more
• Lends securities in which you are short them – the amount of margin you will need to post will be the same function as above.
• Magical Margin Calculator – PB inputs all the securities into a model which calculates the total amount of margin needed for the HF –incorporating correlations, volatility, pricing, etc.
Leverage and Tigers and Bear Markets, Oh My! – Prime Broker and LeveragePrime Broker (PB) calculates this required margin daily:• In our previous T-Bond Fixed Income Arbitrage/Carry trade
example, let’s assume the initial margin required was $70 million.• If the direction of the convergence trade moves further away
from the mean, the borrower will be asked to post more margin. Vice versa, if the direction of the convergence trade moves closer to the mean, the borrower will be able to remove some of the margin cash at the PB
• Warning: Code Red if you are required to post more margin and do not have the cash, the PB will start to unwind your positions>>potentially triggering a further price movement in the relationship further away from mean -- resulting in--->>>>>>>
Are Hedge Funds a good or a bad investment during volatile times?
Are Hedge Funds a good or a bad investment during volatile times?
Pros• Provide opportunities in less efficient markets• Access to the best mind $$ can buy - hmmmm• Reduce portfolio correlation – standard deviation• Ability to provide positive returns in a down marketCons• Darn fees are too high• Lack of Transparency • Lack of Liquidity• Some HF Strategies may have poor performance during
volatile market – a crazy little thing call leverage
Anything we did not uncover?
SourcesWall Street . ComThe BalanceMicrosoft ClipArtInvestopediaCNBCForbesCNNPininterestGetty ImagesRed OnlineMinitab ExpressMicronormousPixabayYouTubeWall Street JournalHedge Fund ResearchNational Museum of American HistoryChicago Mercantile ExchangeShutterstock